No. The next solar eclipse to be visible in the USA will be an annular eclipse on May 20, 2012. The next total eclipse visible in the US will be on August 21, 2017.
Yes, there was an annular solar eclipse on that date, visible in Indonesia. The eclipse was visible as a partial eclipse in Australia, southern India, Indonesia, Thailand and Viet Nam.
There will be an annular "ring of fire" eclipse in Pakistan on June 21, 2020. There will be a total solar eclipse on March 20,2034 that will include northern Pakistan including the cities of Peshawar and Islamabad.See the links below for details.
This is seen during an "annular eclipse".
Yes, at the time of answering this question (May 10th, 2013) there is an annular eclipse visible from the Pacific Ocean.
A solar eclipse that leaves a ring around the sun is known as an annular solar eclipse. This type of eclipse occurs when the moon is too far from Earth to completely cover the sun, resulting in a ring of sunlight being visible around the moon's silhouette during the peak of the eclipse.
The next total solar eclipse viewable from Winnipeg, Canada will on September 16, 3356.
The next total solar eclipse will be on November 13, 2012, and will be visible from northeast Australia. There will be four partial eclipses in 2011, and there will be an annular eclipse on May 20, 2012.
There was a partial solar eclipse on March 19, 2007, visible from northern Alaska, and an annular eclipse was visible across much of the US on May 10, 1994. The total eclipse of July 11, 1991 was visible throughout the Hawaiian Islands, and was visible as a partial eclipse in much of the southwestern US.
The next eclipse visible in the Philippines will be a partial lunar eclipse on May 16, 2022, followed by an annular solar eclipse on April 20, 2042.
An annular eclipse is a solar eclipse in which the thin outer disc of the sun can be seen as a ring around the moon.
There are generally two solar eclipses each year. About a quarter of these are total, another quarter are annular, and the remainder are partial eclipses, depending on the precise alignment of the Earth and the Moon. You can look up the details for any eclipse, solar or lunar, from 2000 BC to 3000 AD on the NASA Eclipse Site at http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse.html. For the areas outside of the annular and total paths, large surrounding areas will also experience a partial eclipse. January 26, 2009: An annular eclipse visible only across the Indian Ocean and Indonesia. August 1, 2008: A total solar eclipse visible across northern Canada, Greenland and northern Russia and into China. February 7, 2008: An annular eclipse visible only in Antarctica. September 11, 2007: A partial solar eclipse visible in South America and Antarctica. March 19, 2007: a partial solar eclipse visible in eastern Asia and Alaska.